No-one tell him Jesus was a brown-skinned man from the Middle East whose family were desperately searching for shelter at Christmas and then became migrants to escape Herod's slaughter.https://t.co/yPDFBEKeEA

RULES OF DECEMBER:1. Chocolate is to be kept behind tiny numbered doors2. Trees now live inside the house3. Hot beverages may only be consumed if accompanied with a mince pie4. Mariah Carey will follow you wherever you go

In 1887, to encourage people to 'buy British', a law was passed that meant all products made in Germany had to be labelled as such. This backfired when the 'Made in Germany' label became a sign of high quality.

You have a mass shooting every single day in your country, your murder rate is many times that of the UK, your healthcare system is a disgrace, you can’t pass anything through a congress that you control. I would focus on that. https://t.co/SNcqOZGvLQ

Daughter: Why was 6 afraid of 7?Me: (rolling my eyes) because 7 ate 9.Daughter: But why did 7 do that?Me: Huh?Daughter: Because he was supposed to get 3 squared meals a day.Me: OMG HOW HAVE I NEVER HEARD THAT ONE BEFORE

Prince Harry's kids will be Americans. What if one grows up to be president and is in line for the throne at the same time? Brits are playing long-ball here, but it's a smart move. They want America back and this is how they'll do it.

Yes, everyone has anxiety. As an emotion. But anxiety as an illness is disabling and life-threatening. The two are related but dangerous to conflate them. Anxiety as an illness fuels itself, it spirals, it dominates every waking second. Not with worry but terror.

People can be cruel without realising it. To dismiss someone's anxiety as something everyone has Is like dismissing someone's brain tumour because you once had a headache. I think the problem is the word. 'Anxiety' is too everyday and timid and mild. We need a new term.